The Bengaluru based EV startup will launch the commercial version of its first all-electric performance bike soon, which the founders believe will beat the best of the petrol-powered motorcycles
Ultraviolette Automotive cofounders Narayan Subramaniam and Niraj Rajmohan
Most EV makers in India have focussed on the mass-market segments so far, in making scooters and three-wheelers, but there is of course plenty of opportunity to get the pulse racing with an exciting high-performance motorcycle. That is what Narayan Subramaniam and Niraj Rajmohan have set out to do at their Bengaluru startup Ultraviolette Automotive.
Ultraviolette is close to launching the commercial version of its first all-electric performance bike, called F77, that the founders believe will beat the best of the petrol guzzling motorcycles out there in the 300-500 cc category that the bike is targeting.
“What we’ve built is an electric motorcycle that can take the internal combustion engine [ICE] competition head on and outcompete them in terms of acceleration, top speed and all the usual parameters used to evaluate sports motorcycles,” Rajmohan says.
The duo knew each other from their school days, and over the years worked on several projects together. “One thing we have in common is our passion for cross-functional innovation and value-add for creative implementation of technology for different use cases,” Subramaniam says.
They started talking about Ultraviolette in 2015 and established the company the following year. The rise of Tesla was also inspiring and they knew that EVs were the future. And they see themselves more as a hi-tech company in the mobility space, while their first product happens to be a motorcycle. The focus on the hi-tech aspects is because much of the tech is becoming commoditised, Subramaniam says.
(This story appears in the 19 November, 2021 issue of Forbes India. To visit our Archives, click here.)